Yesterday, a resounding defeat of Barack Obama's policies was implemented at the ballot box. Until yesterday, Democrats could pretend that there was nothing wrong with their policies, only the perception of those policies by the masses. No longer. Now, they must come to grips with the fact that the mandate they were given in 2006 and 2008 has been squandered in for the proverbial magic beans.
The exception is California, the state which I fear is so far out in its collective thought that it will slide into the Pacific due to its over-sized bureaucracy and debt. The newly elected governor is Democrat Jerry Brown, aka Governor Moonbeam, who was governor over 30 years ago. Barbara Boxer was reelected as well, whose liberal views seem to fit well with a California hell bent on its own destruction. Good luck left coasters! You'll need every bit of it.
A futile search for a unique experience in middle America? This is an attempt to catalog my thoughts, comments and activities in searching for meaning in the same small midwestern town I grew up in.
Wednesday, November 03, 2010
Monday, September 27, 2010
Bedbugs and the Great Recession
Everywhere I look are stories that seem unrelated, but I fear are intertwined: the state of joblessness in America and bedbugs. Both seem to be in the running for scourge of the decade, and the parallels to the past seem inescapable. The Great Depession, well known for its stinging poverty and widespread hopelessness, was also the time of the last great wave of bedbugs. So now, as then, the nation is being fed on by parasites even as people struggle to find work. Shocking!
Experts tell us that the latest rise in bedbugs come from a ban of a substance known as DDT. Apparently DDT was totally effective in wiping out these pests, as well as making endangered bird eggs so brittle that they cracked before the chicks could survive. The EPA has banned the substance for years due to this fact.
Its an interesting result. That we are responsible enough to stop using a chemical that harms our environment is one thing. But, can we not come up with a strategy that is both environmentally responsible and effective? I think so, but these pests seem so intrusive, so insidious that only the most persistent of us can get rid of them.
Clearly, we have the means technically to get rid of the problem of bugs. Do we have the same ability to get the millions of Americans who have lost their jobs over the last few years back to work? I think so, but only if the elusive bipartisan force that every national candidate has claimed to control finally comes to the forefront. It will take both parties, Democrat and Republican to put aside their differences and hammer out something approaching sanity in our fiscal policy. Right now, it looks like not even an extension of the Bush tax cuts will come through before the election, and that is a sad commentary on our system.
Experts tell us that the latest rise in bedbugs come from a ban of a substance known as DDT. Apparently DDT was totally effective in wiping out these pests, as well as making endangered bird eggs so brittle that they cracked before the chicks could survive. The EPA has banned the substance for years due to this fact.
Its an interesting result. That we are responsible enough to stop using a chemical that harms our environment is one thing. But, can we not come up with a strategy that is both environmentally responsible and effective? I think so, but these pests seem so intrusive, so insidious that only the most persistent of us can get rid of them.
Clearly, we have the means technically to get rid of the problem of bugs. Do we have the same ability to get the millions of Americans who have lost their jobs over the last few years back to work? I think so, but only if the elusive bipartisan force that every national candidate has claimed to control finally comes to the forefront. It will take both parties, Democrat and Republican to put aside their differences and hammer out something approaching sanity in our fiscal policy. Right now, it looks like not even an extension of the Bush tax cuts will come through before the election, and that is a sad commentary on our system.
Tuesday, September 07, 2010
Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail '10
It seems that even the Democrats can see November coming: nothing but a headlong running rush into total election meltdown. Whatever they've tried in the past two years has led to rampant unemployment, stagnant wages among those still lucky enough to have a job and a general malaise that makes one yearn for the good karma of the Carter years.
Well, not really.
President Obama has passed the core of his agenda, but now he's lost control of his message. He can't seem to get things back to where they were before he was sworn in. And now he realizes its a hell of a lot easier to throw stones at the people in power than in is to be the MAN in power.
It is ludicrous in the extreme for him to blame Republicans for a sick economy that he has only made worse by flushing billions down the sewers in a Stimulus Package that anyone with any pretense of objectivity has condemned as a failure. "When it comes to just about everything we've done to strengthen the middle class and rebuild our economy, almost every Republican in Congress said no." Nothing could be a greater contradiction, a greater misstatement than that. As long as he continues along that trajectory, Democratic hopes for at least surviving November will lay in a smoking crater of Obama's making.
Well, not really.
President Obama has passed the core of his agenda, but now he's lost control of his message. He can't seem to get things back to where they were before he was sworn in. And now he realizes its a hell of a lot easier to throw stones at the people in power than in is to be the MAN in power.
It is ludicrous in the extreme for him to blame Republicans for a sick economy that he has only made worse by flushing billions down the sewers in a Stimulus Package that anyone with any pretense of objectivity has condemned as a failure. "When it comes to just about everything we've done to strengthen the middle class and rebuild our economy, almost every Republican in Congress said no." Nothing could be a greater contradiction, a greater misstatement than that. As long as he continues along that trajectory, Democratic hopes for at least surviving November will lay in a smoking crater of Obama's making.
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